Tales from the Freudian Crypt: The Death Drive in Text and Context 9781503617902

Tales from the Freudian Crypt is a fundamental reassessment of the Freud legend that aims to shake the very foundations

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Tales from the Freudian Crypt: The Death Drive in Text and Context
 9781503617902

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TALES FROM THE FREUDIAN CRYPT

Tales from the Freudian Crypt

THE DEATH DRIVE IN TEXT AND CONTEXT

Todd Dufresne

STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Stanford, California

2000

Stanford University Press Stanford, California © 2000 by the Board ofTrustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University Printed in the United States of America CIP data appear at the end of the book

For Clara, confidante and better half

Contents

Foreword by Mikkel Borch]acobsen

xiii

Priface I.

ix

Twilight of the Idols: From Freud to Lacan Beyond the "French Freud"-in America, 5. A Continental Breakfast at L'Hotel Abyss, 9· The Freudian Currency,

2.

1.

The Heterogeneous Beyond: An Introduction to the Dead and Dying

1]

In Media Res: Given, Taken, Denied, and Forgotten 'Beyond's, 14. Biographical 'Beyond's, 27. Biological 'Beyond's, 43· Klein and the "Clinical" 'Beyond', 65. Philosophical 'Beyond's, 8o. Derrida and the Deconstructive 'Beyond', 129.

3-

The Other Beyond: a.k.a. Group Psychology

145

and the Analysis of the Ego Becoming Dead, 147. The Hypnotic 'Beyond', 166.

Afterword: How to Be a Freudian; or, The Economics ofNotThinking Notes Bibliography

207

Index

22]

Foreword

On November 29, 1993, Time asked on its cover:"Is Freud Dead?" Sigmund Freud died in 1939, so the question must bear on the "long shadow" this man cast on our century: Is psychoanalysis still viable as a proper applied science and an appropriate clinical practice in the age ofbiochemistry and psychotropic medications? Or is it, as critics contend, a thing of the past, an outdated nineteenth-century theory with a hopelessly ineffectual therapeutics, which ought to be confined to the dustbin of history (a popular website is entitled Burying Freucf)? The stakes are high, and the question gets angrily debated. "Freud wars" are waged in the press, Freud exhibits are mounted and protested, anti-Freudian petitions are met by Freudian counter-petitions, thus providing the defenders of psychoanalysis with a foolproof argument: would psychoanalysis elicit such sound and fury if it weren't alive and well? Todd Dufresne turns this old argument on its head. Far from proving the inherent vitality of psychoanalysis, he claims that attacks against it are precisely what infuse it with life. Here Dufresne invokes Freud's own theory of life and death, as announced in Beyond the Pleasure Principle: an organism lives only to the extent that some external excitation threatens its repose, forcing it to defend itselfby erecting a "protective shield" (Reizschutz)-thus enabling its growth. Life, according to good Freudian doctrine, is but an annoying disturbance, a detour from the pure and simple absence of excitation,

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nirvana, death. Psychoanalysis, therefore, is not alive in spite of its critics, but because of their irritating (literally exciting) attacks. Left to itself, psychoanalysis is already dying. Worse, it has always already been dead. When all is said and done, psychoanalysis reveals itself to have been a tale from the crypt. One might find Dufresne's argument a little too clever, a little too facetious. In turning Freud's own theory against him, doesn't he simply repeat it without taking any critical distance? But that is precisely Dufresne's point: psychoanalysis is nothing but an immense defense, a Reizschutz against the so-called "outside." As such, the more we attack it, the more it grows and expands, one protective layer added on to the other-Kleinism, FreudoMarxism, Lacanianism, the "hermeneutic" Freud, the "deconstructionist" Freud, and the rest. Dufresne surveys this huge and untidy literature, but he knows better than to simply critique it. Rather than adding one more critical life-support system to the ever-proliferating body of psychoanalysis, he advocates its right to die: leave it alone, let it choke to death on its own waste, like the infusorians described by Freud in Beyond the Pleasure Principle. Dufresne reads Freud as no other, understanding full well that psychoanalysis is fundamentally immune to criticism, because it was never concerned with reality. Critics think they inflict deadly wounds upon psychoanalysis by showing that it does not measure up to its scientific claims. But they miss the point. Psychoanalysis was never a psychological science, but rather a metapsychological fantasy, the product of Sigmund Freud's utter indifference to the world and to others. Freud often claimed, in positivistic fashion, that his metapsychological theories were mere "speculative superstructures" (r925a, 32) built on clinical "observations," and that they could "be replaced and discarded without damage" (1914b, 77) if the clinical material required it. But this is a pleasant joke: Freud never took "no" for an answer, whether it came from his patients, from his critics, or from reality itself. Freud would purely and simply dismiss evidence that contradicted his metapsychological constructions, as when Jones pressured him to drop his Lamarkian conclusions in Moses and Monotheism: "My position, no doubt, is made more difficult by the present attitude of biological science, which refuses [!] to hear of the inheritance of acquired characteristics by succeeding generations. I must, however, in all modesty confess that nevertheless I cannot do without this factor in biological evolution" (1939: roo). Such an attitude is not that of a scientist, nor even that of a philosopher. It is that of the narcissistic dreamer, of "His Majesty the Ego." Dufresne puts it well: "At the end of the day, everyone plays a secondary role to the absolute narcissist that Freud imagined in his metapsychology and reserved for himself as the undisputed father of psychoanalysis. Psychoanalysis was his idea,

FOREWORD

XI

after all, his psychic apparatus projected onto the world of all Others." Here again, one might object that Dufresne uses the very terminology of Freudian metapsychology that he attacks. But such a strategy is unavoidable, since metapsychological speculation is so radically focussed upon itself. From the Pr~jectfor a Scientific Psychology to "On Narcissism: An Introduction;' through Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Freud's metapsychology describes one and the same thing: the mind's stubborn indifference to reality and to others, the "omnipotence of thoughts" of the "absolute narcissist," his incorporation of all reality, of all "objects" (what I have called elsewhere the "Freudian subject''). What would be the point of arguing with Freud, the egotistical superbaby? Freud couldn't care less. He is beyond our reach, meta, in the psychoanalytic yonder where he plays with us, his speculative bobbins: Fort, da! Fort, da! Dufresne is right: let's leave him alone. -Mikkel Borch-:Jacobsen

Preface In his attempt to describe the role of the death instinct, Freud discovered that hardly an aspect of life was not vulnerable to its destructive force. This disturbing concept, once the source of bitter dispute, is now [ca. I959] regarded as one of the very foundations of modern psychology and indispensable to the understanding of modern society. -Gregory Zilboorg, back-cover recommendation for the Bantam edition of Beyond the Pleasure Principle

I have long been grateful for Freud's later work, especially his fifty-eightpage essay of 1920, Beyond the Pleasure Principle, wherein sexuality, therapy, and the art of interpretation are irredeemably contaminated by, among other things, death, philosophy, and the science of biology. It is a gratitude born of the illicit pleasure that comes from playing amongst such a great mess, where commentary on the foundational and indispensable nature of Freud's deathdrive theory sits side by side with verdicts that are precisely the opposite. Faced with this dilemma, I have been variously tempted to launder this untidy essay, arrange its bits and pieces into order, discard the rotten parts, and add to the whole thing fresh contributions of my own. Of course, there is nothing new in these temptations; the greatest part of the secondary literature on Beyond the Pleasure Principle (hereafter BPP) takes a page from here, a line from there, and imports a whole lot of other concerns from outside, in what is often a desperate attempt to repair or create anew a more acceptable portrait oflife and death in psychoanalysis. Temptations notwithstanding, my starting point is rather different. I am not interested in purifYing Freud by discarding those parts of his theory that are absurd or plainly wrong or by transforming his blatant biologism into a trite but acceptable metaphor about, say, "modern society." These are the modus operandi of those who want to extricate Freud from his own difficulties or, among the more "emancipated" critics, to save psychoanalysis

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from Freud's mistakes. From the perspective of intellectual history, I am much more interested in following Freud down the different paths of his text, reading BPP against his other works and against the social, historical, and intellectual context of his time-just as one would approach any figure in the history of ideas. Similarly, I am interested in the many commentaries on Freud's life and work that, for better and for worse, continue to define and redefine the stakes of the interpretive game. To these ends, I have proceeded by way of spring cleaning: sifting through the material to find what is precious, worthless, interesting, or simply bizarre. I have, in short, tried to catalog the historical and intellectual tangle created by Freud's essay, all the while allowing the different voices to speak for themselves-and also for me-as much as possible. This critical work is, in a rigorous philosophical sense, a necessary first step that clears some much needed space for fresh interpretation of Freud's text, interpretation that I have attempted in what follows, most especially in the last chapter, "The Other Beyond." The result is a general introduction, or reintroduction, to the dead and dying along the detour of the relevant primary and secondary texts involved. It goes without saying (although I am always forced to say it) that I find the literature on BPP at once fascinating and disturbing: fascinating because so provocatively heterogeneous, disturbing because so often delirious. Either way, BPP is a site overripe for fresh analysis and criticism. It may be worth recalling, however, that a critical introduction is not a substitute for reading the relevant texts involved. This is true even though all of the texts related to BPP are derivative, including those primary texts that Freud himself cites or fails to cite-the foundations of which are always elsewhere and multiple. So I recommend that readers consult the relevant primary, secondary, or tertiary literature that digs more deeply into any one spot that I may have explored superficially, too quickly, or not at all. Inevitably I have chosen to discuss certain theorists and ideas at greater length than others and cannot claim to have covered every aspect of the literature. Even so, I have managed to trace the logic of the death-drive theory through its incarnations in biography, biology, clinical discourse, philosophy, deconstruction, and, finally, in the political maneuvers of a psychoanalysis desperate to steer clear of its great Other, suggestion. To help situate the death-drive theory, I begin with a general introduction to the analytic scene in North America today, after which I quickly outline the social, historical, and intellectual context of Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle. Psychoanalysis has continued to gather interest over the years, and the present study is offered as bank book, audit, and prospectus for future research in the field.

PREFACE

XV

;lf:~.:

~'

)

Critical Freud studies are still the exception, in part because analysts and academic Freudians have done their best to cast such work as mere "Freud bashing," or as a revisionism flawed by naive positivism or worse. The truth is that the history of psychoanalysis is a source of continuous embarrassment, already so thoroughly "revisionist" (invented, fraudulent, mythological) that advocates of psychoanalysis are always bound, knowingly or not, to spin that history, and the critical assessments based upon that history, in false directions. I could not have liberated myself from these unfounded prejudices if not for the work of a small group of scholars that I was lucky enough to read, and sometimes to meet: Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen, Frans:ois Roustang, Frederick Crews, Frank Sulloway, Peter Swales, and Paul Roazen. I do not assume, of course, that this diverse group will approve of my efforts, for which I alone am responsible and about which they are mostly unaware. Special thanks goes to Mikkel for his intelligence, good humor, and friendship; and also to the reviewers who provided independent assessments and critiques of the manuscript. During my years in the Graduate Programme in Social and Political Thought at York University, Toronto, I found additional encouragement, stimulation, and bureaucratic assistance from numerous friends and colleagues: Clara Sacchetti, Kenneth Little, Helmar Drost, Rodolphe Gasche, Raymond Dufresne, Gary Genosko, Andy Beardsal, Paul Antze, David McNally, Hans Mohr, and Julian Patrick. Cheers. I am also pleased to acknowledge, as inspiration, everyone involved in the edited collections I organized and published during my graduate years. Kind regards to my colleagues at the Psychoanalytic Thought Program, Trinity College, University of Toronto, where I found temporary shelter as a Social Science and Humanities Research Council postdoctoral fellow, and as a research associate. My deep gratitude to the SSHRC for continued financial support in 1997-99, in addition to the graduate support I received in 1994-95, and also to the Queen Elizabeth II Ontario Fellowship of 1995-96, which I was honored to hold. Parts of this book were presented as invited lectures, and I want to thank everyone involved for their interest, including Guy Allen, the Psychoanalytic Thought Program, University of Toronto (February 6, 1997); Thomas

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Kemple, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, University of British Columbia (April 9, 1998); Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen, Department of Comparative Literature, University of Washington (April 12, 1998); Frederick Crews and Richard Hutson, Department of English, University of Berkeley (November 6, 1998). A version of Chapter I appeared as the editor's introduction to Returns if the "French Freud": Freud, Lacan, and Beyond (New York and London: Routledge, 1997); I thank Routledge for permission to reproduce this work. My appreciation to D. Jaro Kotalik, oncologist, and Dr. Joseph Wasielewski, pathologist, for procuring slides of cancer cells for the book cover. Much obliged. A heartfelt thanks to Helen Tartar and Elizabeth Berg of Stanford University Press, who brought this book into existence with rare sagacity and professionalism.

A queer instinct indeed, directed to the destruction of its own organic home! -Sigmund Freud, New Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis (1933)

This was the shocking thing; that the slime of the pit seemed to utter cries and voices; that the amorphous dust gesticulated and sinned; that what was dead, and had no shape, should usurp the offices oflife. -Robert Louis Stevenson, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886)

CHAPTER I

Twilight of the Idols FROM FREUD TO LACAN

The Freudian Currency The effect of psychoanalysis has something of an inexorably tightening noose. One cannot engage in it without, as it were, crying for help or at least struggling with it incessantly. - Viktor von Weizsaecker1

In keeping with an apocalyptic tone appropriate for the fin de siecle, and no doubt exaggerated by the close of the millennium, it has become fashionable in many quarters to announce the failure or bankruptcy of psychoanalysis, if not its immanent death. Whether one takes such dire prophesies seriously or not, it is at least superficially true that the "psychoanalytic century" has finally drawn to a close. Of course, many critics declared the "death" of psychoanalysis well before its founder, Sigmund Freud, died in 1939. For them, psychoanalysis was always something of a con game, a stillborn science, the sublimated gift of Freud's own anality. As one critic put it, psychoanalysts are mere psychoanalen. 2 At the same time, the chorus announcing the death of psychoanalysis has slowly become its own "tradition" within psychoanalysis (Hale 1995: 355). In fact, interminable controversy has had an ironic result: more may have been written about Freud's life and work than almost any other figure in Western

2

TWILIGHT OF THE IDOLS

history. It is certainly remarkable that the autobiographical "science" of one man has made possible not only a vast body of secondary literature but an enduring institutional body as well. Given this long and divisive history, it is not surprising that our picture of Freud and psychoanalysis has changed dramatically, especially over the last twenty-five years or so of revisionist scholarship. With the gradual release of previously restricted documents from the Library of Congress, coupled with new, complete, and uncensored editions of Freud's private correspondence, our view of psychoanalysis was bound to change. And surely it will continue to change, since, for instance, only about six thousand (filling over a dozen volumes) of the estimated thirty-five thousand letters Freud wrote have appeared in print. If the accumulation of new primary-source material hasn't been enough to shake the old hagiographic picture of Freud, certainly the revisionist and pathographic research on the history of psychoanalysis has. Clearly the emergence of critical studies on Freud has not enforced our transference onto the man and his theories: for many it has weakened this tie to its breaking point. We live in a time of critical reassessment, when scholars are taking a close second and third look at the legend(s) of Freud, the group psychology of his followers, the foundations of his "science," the therapeutic efficacy of analysis, and so on. From a medical and therapeutic perspective, these are no longer the glory days that psychoanalysis enjoyed in urban America during the 1950's. But having unearthed, as Frederick Crews (1993) put it, "the unknown Freud," have we finally committed psychoanalysis to the grave? Echoing a 1966 cover story about the "death of God," Time recently (1993) captured this sentiment, asking plainly "Is Freud Dead?" This, however, was and remains an altogether audacious and ambivalent question. For when we pose the same question of God and Freud, we already presuppose that Freud's death has or will cast, as Nietzsche put it, a similarly long shadow. In this way, Time deferred and sidestepped at least one very important question about our transference onto Freud and his theories: who among us still mistakes Freud for God? While the Freudian corpus began to decompose in America during the 1970's, it gathered an afterlife of its own in France. As Sherry Turkle (1992) suggests, the psychoanalytic movement became a genuine "culture" there after the May 1968 student uprisings and throughout the 1970's. Disillusioned with the large questions of social reform, young radicals turned their attention to the individual and to psychoanalysis. As French philosopher Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen puts it:

TWILIGHT OF THE IDOLS

3

In the wake of May '68 and its utopian dream, there weren't that many exciting intellectual projects around. May '68 had failed, you couldn't believe in Marxism anymore, and structuralism was hopelessly removed from life. Psychoanalysis, with its transgressive and initiatory aspects, seemed to be the only theory left that could claim to effectively "change life" -changer Ia vie, as the May '68 slogan would have it. Remember, the May '68 movement wanted to revolutionize "everyday life," and, in retrospect, it seems clear to me that my generation's interest in psychoanalysis was a way of pursuing this revolutionary project by other means.We all longed for that "high" that May '68 had provided, and that is how so many of us got hooked on psychoanalysis. Psychoanalysis was a substitute for the impossible revolution. (Borch-Jacobsen I994)

Like other intellectual trends in France, psychoanalysis thrived as a cult of personality, one centered around the name and legend(s) of Jacques Lacan. "It is to him," writes analyst-historian Octave Mannoni, "that we owe the very faithful and very creative rebirth of Freudianism in France" (1968: 179). Or as Stuart Schneiderman states, echoing Alfred North Whitehead's famous remark about Plato, "Before Lacan, the history of psychoanalysis was a series of footnotes to Freud" (1983: 19). "Lacanism" quickly spread among intellectuals and, through the popular media, to everyone else; French psychoanalysis thus became synonymous with Lacan's name. In turn, psychoanalytic literature, or anything with an opportunistic dash of Freud in its title, became a large, profitable, "infinitely elastic" publishing industry in France (Turkle 1992: 195-96).After decades of apathy toward psychoanalysis, thoughts finally turned to a French standard edition of Freud's work. Unfortunately, as debates still rage over the proper translation of Freud's original German, this publication has yet to appear in its entirety. 3 In this atmosphere, exciting new ideas emerged about psychoanalysis, arguably for the first time since Freud and some of his more talented followers wrote and published. While the majority of people hardly understood Lacan's baroque writings and free-associational seminars, everyone nonetheless agreed that his work was timely and somehow significant. As Lacan himself put it: "We are confronted by this singular contradiction-I don't know if it should be called dialectical-that the less you understand the better you listen. For I often say very difficult things and see you hanging on my every word, and I learn later that some of you didn't understand. On the other hand, when you're told things that are too simple, almost too familiar, you are less attentive" (1954-55: 141; trans. modified). 4 True to his word, Lacan certainly did his best to say "very difficult things" in his published writings and in his weekly seminaire de textes.

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TWILIGHT OF THE IDOLS

With the acrimonious debate over Ia passe (the contentious process whereby analysands became recognized analysts) by the mid 1970's, the dissolution of the Ecole Freudienne de Paris in 1980, and Lacan's death the following year, the once fertile climate for psychoanalysis in France began to change. The same popular media that propelled psychoanalysis into the public eye became the site ofbitter and divisive feuds among traditionally silent analysts. If it didn't have this quality before, Lacanian psychoanalysis became strangely surreal. This may not be altogether accidental, since-to Freud's great displeasure-it was the surrealists alone who embraced psychoanalysis in France during the 1920's (see Roudinesco 1990: ch. r). In this regard it is worth recalling that Lacan, with his eccentric and sometimes outrageous persona, was very much influenced by the early surrealists and contributed to their magazine Le minotaure. The corrosive atmosphere of the late 1970's and early 198o's crystallized around the role that Lacan's son-in-law, philosopher Jacques-Alain Miller, increasingly played in the institutional affairs of psychoanalysis. A nonanalyst married to Lacan's daughter Judith, Miller was the official editor of Lacan's seminars, the main power in the department of psychoanalysis at Vincennes (developed in the wake of May 1968), and designated heir-apparent to Lacan's name and considerable fortune; a fortune that consisted, among other things, of rare books, paintings, and gold bullion. Without delving too deeply into this family (and legal) romance, it is enough for us to note that many of Lacan's older, more established followers could never support Miller's La Cause Freudienne after the controversial dissolution of the Ecole Freudienne. Consequently, although Miller may have successfully advanced one psychoanalytic movement among others in France, he has not managed to preserve the unique psychoanalytic "culture" that thrived under Lacan. To put it more bluntly, Miller has been unable to preserve and enhance Lacan's regal power in his own name. But, to be fair, who could? While many mistook (and still mistake) Lacan for God, the transference onto his life and work has weakened considerably since his death. Recovering from their Lacanian hangovers, former and sometime analysts like Franrld-of all places (Geoghegan 1981: 63). 7 4· Despite the apparent sophistication of their thinking, theorists often fall prey to the most naive beliefs. Max Horkheimer, for example, was in analysis with Karl Landauer in 1928 for "an inability to lecture without a prepared text" Gay 1973: 8788)-an absurd use of therapy made less so by the analytic penchant for dignifying latent motivations with deeper, hidden, serious ones. Horkheimer was apparently cured of this grave disorder. Of course, Freud to this day continues to find his most uncritical, if blind, support from those outside institutional psychoanalysis. 75. The question ofHeidegger and dialectics creates another problem, but one that exceeds the scope of this examination; suffice to note that Marcuse praised Heidegger's work on Hegel in his "habilitation" thesis Hegels Ontologie und die Grundlegung einerTheorie der Geschichtlichkeit, published in 1932 (see Robinson 1969: 192). 76. During this time of antiauthoritarian activity, Horkheimer rejected his old critical-theory views and even defended the pope's assessment of birth-control pills (Slater I 97T II6). 77· Hegel r8oT III. 78. Kojeve 1939: ro. 79. In later years, it is true, Ricoeur would tone down his critique ofLacan's linguistic approach to Freud. In fact, he praised this approach, stating that "these attempts at reformulation have given us not only original but also liberating work, especially with regard to the prejudices that even Freud remained trapped in concerning the function of language" (1978: 305). In this article, "Image and Language in Psychoanalysis;' Ricoeur takes a major step toward Lacan's linguistic

NOTES

conception of Freud, but-of course-reserves a space for his own originality by advocating the more authentic place of the image in psychoanalytic discourse. So. Those interested in the deconstruction of Freud are, in fact, better served by Weber and Gasche, who echo some ofDerrida's ideas but, I think, with greater success. In this respect, my treatment ofDerrida is not meant to be representative of the entire "field" -assuming for the moment that such a thing exists. Just the same, I try to draw some conclusions and underline a problematic that is not restricted to Derrida's work alone. 81. Derrida 196T 220. 82. Derrida returns haphazardly to the themes of the "prosthetic" (extended) psyche and the death drive in Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression (1995)-a slight book that, in my opinion, is a cautionary tale about the excesses of self-referentiality. Interested readers might consult my critical review (1997b). 8 3. For more on diffl:rance, see Derrida's essay of that name (1968), and also his various remarks in Positions (1972b). 84. Derrida actually refers to this new field as "psychoanalytic graphology" (1967: 2 31; his emphasis), naively pointing readers in the direction of Melanie Klein. "Klein's entire thematic," he exudes, speaking of good and bad objects and so on, "could doubtlessly begin to illuminate, if followed prudently [sic!], the entire problem of the archi-trace." 85. For a detailed examination of Derrida's theory of writing, I recommend Johnson's book, System and Writing in the Philosophy ofjacques Derrida (1993). 86. Nietzsche I 88T 168. Nietzsche also writes: "What if pleasure and displeasure were so tied together that whomever wanted to have as much of one must also have as much of the other?" (8 5). Consider also Schopenhauer in this context: "The truth is that the two [life and death] belong to each other inseparably, since they constitute a deviation from the right path, and a return to this is as difficult as it is desirable" (1844: 579). 87. Because of its meandering style, The Post Card is far more than an analysis of Freud, the reading of which is caught up in a network of others and of other thematics. As Christopher Norris puts it, the book "takes up a great variety of philosophic themes, among them the relationship of Plato to Socrates, the Heideggerian questioning of metaphysics, the status of truth-claims in the discourse of Freudian psychoanalysis, and the way that all these topics return to haunt the seemingly detached, almost clinical idiom of Oxford linguistic philosophy" (1992: 176-77). Without advocating Oxford philosophy, I am not sold on this diversity, which is fun but also reckless-or fun because it is reckless. As already suggested, I have restricted my reading ofDerrida to Freud and BPP. 88. For another appearance of the "crypt" in Derrida's work, see his essay "Fors: The Anglish Words of Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok" (1977). A warning, though, since this is one of his least accessible, almost unreadable, efforts. There are perhaps three areas in the essay which resonate with my discussion of Derrida's Freud: the "logic" of the proper name; the role of fiction in psychoanalysis; and the self-involvement of Freud in his text, in this case that of the Wolf Man. Similar but

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more accessible discussions can be found in The Ear of the Other (1985), which examines Nietzsche's legacy. 89. It is here that Derrida reads Freud's da against Heidegger's Da-sein, making the proper death coincide with the discourse of authenticity (1980: 359-60). For Derrida, like some others in the French tradition, Freud and Heidegger correspond, without, however, having ever corresponded. 90. The sometimes extreme self-indulgence of Derrida's work has been an inspiration, or license, for Derridians and non-Derridians alike. Gregory Ulmer's (1989) theory of"mystory" is the logical, if absurd, culmination ofDerrida's self-involved writing. But so is John O'Neill's (1992) "Deconstructing Fort/Derrida," which is distinguished by being the best example of the worst of this genre (if that is the right word). 9 I. Derrida's violent appropriation of the other to the deconstructive cause, to the papa, is repeated in his recent discussions ofFoucault and Lacan. In each case the appropriation came after their deaths in the early 198o's. Given Derrida's difficult relations with Foucault and Lacan while they were alive, this seems a bit opportunistic, not to mention distasteful. Of course, if Derrida is not Freud, neither is he Foucault or Lacan.

Chapter 3: The Other Beyond I. Freud 1933a: I IO. 2. Freud writes that the "fact" of constancy, of a "Nirvana principle," "is one of our strongest reasons for believing in the existence of death instincts" (1920a: 56). 3. Freud clarifies this view in a letter to Jones in early I 9 3 5, stating that because the death drive is "intent on destroying its own living mass ... it is therefore assumed that the direction outwards [i.e., growth] originates from Eros" (Freud and Jones 1993: 741).As he put it in The Ego and The Id, "The clamour of life proceeds for the most part from Eros. And from the struggle against Eros!" (r923a: 46). 4· As noted earlier, the connection between sleep and death is more explicitly laid out by Ferenczi in Thalassa (r924: 73-80). See also Nunberg (1955: 212). s. The child's primary narcissism is an "assumption" that Freud makes here, but one he takes over from his examination of the mental lives of "savages." As he says, primary narcissism "is less easy to grasp by direct observation than to confirm by inference from elsewhere" (1914b: 90). To this end he turns to his adult patients for (obviously questionable) inferential evidence. 6. Like the sexual instinct, she tends to "watch over" the "elementary organism" and "provide them with a safe shelter while they are defenceless against the stimuli of the external world" (1920a: 40). 7- Freud 1941: 300. 8. As Freud writes in The Interpretation of Dreams, "The unconscious is the true psychical reality; in its innermost nature it is as much unknown to us as the reality of the external world, and it is as incompletely presented by the data of consciousness as is the external world by the communications of our sense organs" (1900, s: 613; his emphasis).

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9. It seems to me that the psychic apparatus not only conjures up the militaristic image of the walled city-for instance, the inner city of Vienna that defends itself, grows, and finally outgrows its walls; the walls that in turn become the Ringstrasse, a street upon which Freud walked every day-but also the more mundane image of the living tree. Freud mentions trees once in BPP, noting that they can live an extraordinary long time. The "impression," he writes, "that there is a fixed average duration of life ... is countered when we consider that certain large animals and certain gigantic arboreal growths reach a very advanced age and one which cannot at present be computed" (1920a: 45). Not unlike the ancient cities buried underfoot, the tree holds a number of secrets about the past that may have piqued Freud's archaeological interests. It is possible, then, that Freud proceeded by analogy to model and measure his "pre-psychoanalytic" theories of 1895 on tree physiology and what was later to become the field of dendrochronology, the study of dendron over chronos, trees over time-a field of invaluable importance for modern archaeology, where growth rings provide researchers with a picture of the past. The possible connections are tantalizing. First, the crust that protects the organism from the external world functions like the bark that protects the tree from the elements. Second, the past health and maturity of the psyche, like the tree, can be assessed by a certain kind of interpretation. Many have observed the presence of tree rings throughout history, but it was not really until the seventeenth and eighteenth century that growth rings were recognized as an annual calendar written in real time. Leonardo da Vinci recognized this fact, as did Montaigne, but their advances went unnoticed for years. It is likely that Freud, who loved to walk in the woods and pick mushrooms, understood that tree rings record a hidden past. It is even possible that Freud's archaeological contacts discussed this idea with him, even though it was mostly unknown until the 1920's and later. If so, trees may have provided Freud a model for understanding the repressed memories of individual patients: like geological layers in the earth, the passing seasons leave marks within the vegetative and psychic organism as layers piled one on top of the other. The rings of a tree, like trauma, are literally the internal representations of a past encounter with the external world. If the psychic apparatus is thus arborescent, an important feature of Freud's theory of memory thereby becomes more sensible: his idea that the effects of the original trauma are often unknown until much later. For as energy from the external world bombards the psychic apparatus over a period of years, causing defense and then growth, the outermost layers of growth are only slowly absorbed into the organism. In other words, what was once written on the surface of the organism eventually becomes the very stuff of the interior: in one case, wood, in the other, memories. In the meantime, the traumas are slowly covered over with fresh growth and hidden beneath the surface crust/bark; time heals all wounds. However, by wielding the proper tool-the lumbeljack's ax, the surgeon's knife, the archaeologist's shovel, or the psychoanalyst's words-the researcher is able to conduct an investigation, sometimes an autopsy, on the organism. It should be noted that dendrochronology, unlike psychoanalysis, has born out its

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earliest scientific hopes. According to Michael G. L. Baillie, tree-ring dating is today a "revolution" and the fulfilment of"the chronological holy grail" (I995: I2-I3). ro. Descartes's dualism of mind and body, thought and extension, is loosely traced in Freud's own dualism of the death and life drives. In addition, like Descartes's follower A. Geulincx, Freud more or less devised two separate though parallel worlds of mind and body-the movements of which I am unpacking here and in the pages that follow. I I. As far as I can tell, this point has gone virtually unnoticed in the literature, with perhaps one exception. In his Critical Dictionary of Psychoanalysis, Charles Rycroft makes passing comment of" unwarrantable deductions from the fact that organisms are poisoned by their own excreta" (1972: xiv). I2. Moreover, bowel complaints were all the rage in Paris by the 189o's (Shorter 198 5: I I6- 17), a fact that may have caught Freud's attention in r 88 5 while he studied with Charcot at the Salpetriere. I 3. These theories may even have played a part in Freud's own racial prejudices about Eastern Jews, since constipated patients were sometimes said to acquire a "dirty color" -precisely the kind of description that permitted medical doctors to assert, according to Sander Gilman (1997), that the dark skin color of the Jew reflected a degeneration of the race and a concurrent disposition to hysteria, syphilis, and so on. 14. Freud seems to have avoided the problem of constipation in his own life and in the lives of his patients. During toilet training, Little Hans, for example, was constipated, a fact that Freud neglects but which goes a long way toward explaining the boy's obsession with "Lumf," or feces. Also, constipation may have played a role in Freud's analysis of the Wolf Man, in particular impacting upon the Wolf Man's unresolved transference problem with Freud. (I owe this last speculation to a personal communication with Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen.) But possibly the most direct evidence of Freud's avoidance of the psychological problem of constipation appears in Smiley Blanton's Diary. Closing his entry for September 4, 1929, Blanton writes: "When I spoke again of my colits, Freud said perhaps it was caused by the heat. Not once has he suggested that it was due to resistance" (1971: 29; his emphasis). 15. According to Max Schur, Freud's personal physician between 1928 and 1939, "This 'cure,' which consisted of drinking considerable amounts of mildly laxative, warm Karlsbad water pumped directly from natural springs, was at the time a staqdard prescription for a variety of gastrointestinal and biliary symptoms. Karls bad also had beautiful woods, good hotels, and excellent food-comforts provided by all European spas in those decades" (1972: 255). r6. Shorter notes that it was mostly women who exhibited these symptoms at the turn of the century, although as one London physician in 1923 states: "An abdominal man, on the other hand, is by comparison a rare bird, and when caught has a way of turning out to be a Jew-or a doctor" (1985: II7). Freud may have agreed with this sentiment and produced the appropriate symptoms. 17. See Freud 1921:102.

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I 8. This was not a meeting of the Vienna Psychoanalytical Society, which Freud stopped attending after his first operation for cancer in 1923. Instead, it was a gathering of a few select members of the Society, in this case (and in two previous instances) organized by Paul Federn (Freud 1992: so). 19. It is perhaps no accident that Freud cites this precise ode (in Latin) in a letter of May 27, 1920, to Max Eitingon during a time in which he was "correcting and completing" Beyond the Pleasure Principle (in Schur 1972: 33 1). In the letter the Latin appears as "Fractus si illabatur orbis impavidum, ferient ruinae." Sterba cites the proper English translation of the ode: "Yea, if the globe should fall, he'll stand I fearless amidst the crash" (1982: I I 5). Schur also provides an English translation, which reads: "If the sky should fall in pieces, the ruins will not daunt it" (1972: 33 I, n. w). Schur provides, in addition, Horace's original Latin, which is in fact the version Sterba gives. It is likely, then, that Sterba worked backward from this correct Latin passage to the mistranslated version Freud offered; he does not offer the German translation of the Latin. Because Sterba often gets small details wrong in this book, I am inclined to think that the version Freud gives to Eitingon in writing was also the one he gave to Sterba and his guests orally. 20. "Whatever is done from love," as Nietzsche states, "always occurs beyond good and evil" (I 886: 90). 2 I. These sentiments are, however, also present in Schopenhauer, who as suggested provides a list of similar statements throughout the ages (1844: s8s-s88). But Nietzsche's version is as good as any, especially since it was the most current version at that time. Incidentally, it is worth noting that Rank used this citation from Nietzsche as the epigraph for The Trauma cif Birth (Kramer 1996: 7). Rank's skepticism about analytic therapy was merely a reflection of Freud's own therapeutic pessimism: both knew that analysis had become interminable and that patients were being sacrificed to the grail of"research." But Rank, just like Ferenczi, sought to alter that theory and therapy accordingly, making it more humane and hopeful; but it was here that they betrayed Freud's dark philosophy of resignation and fell afoul of his sycophantic followers. 22. As Freud puts it in a letter of April21, 1918, "This has been a troubled time, marked by a growing resentment against the whole outer world, which was no doubt intensified by the necessity ofbeing kind and tolerant every day to ten human beings [patients] who had gone off the rails" (Freud and Andreas-Salome 1966: 77). 23. Esther Menaker, who was analyzed by Anna Freud in the early 1930's, is decidely critical of what she calls Freud's "destructive" practice. During an interview in 1997, she stated flatly, and in my opinion correctly, "Psychoanalysis denigrates the individual's self by putting him or her in a submissive, narcissistic position .... At best it is suited to those few people who live a submissive life; a life which psychoanalysis is only too happy to reinforce" (from an unpublished interview with Menaker, October 13, 1997, in New York). 24. If psychoanalysis is merely a detour on the way to better things, it at least has the merit of making sociality-in reality, therapy-a positively unheimlich experience: "that class of the frightening which leads back to what is known of old and long fa-

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miliar" (Freud 1919b: 220). A careful reading of even the first chapter of "The 'Uncanny' "(Das Unheimliche), an essay that foreshadows Beyond the Pleasure Principle, reveals that the uncanny return "to what is known and old" is always already a return to the crypt. After reviewing various interpretations across cultures, Freud uncovers in this first chapter a basic ambivalence at the heart of the word uncanny.As a result he is able to conclude that "What is heimlich thus comes to be unheimlich" (224). But if the canny can become strange and uncanny, Freud defies this essential ambivalence-which in principle should work both ways-and makes of the latter a mere part of the former: "unheimlich is in some way or other a subspecies of heimlich" (226). This is a strange but inevitable conclusion given Freud's views about constancy and pleasure. For the canny is obviously the "old and familiar" instinct-so old that it has become natural, biological, inheritable-that characterizes death and nonexistence. Life, on the other hand, is a source of increased tension and unpleasure that is bound (or, more literally, is unbound) to promote new, uncanny, and frightening experiences. Metapsychology, then, is the realm of the canny, a homey place beyond the pleasure principle that naturally exceeds existence and its analysis, while psychoanalysis is a piece of sociality that is at once a falling away from the canny and a desperate attempt to reinstate it among the living as the compulsive repetition of the transference neurosis. 25. Freud and Andreas-Salome 1966: I 54· 26. McDougall 1936: 2. 27. Freud only retrospectively claimed that his patients believed in stories of seduction. In his original papers of I 896, the so-called "memories" of seduction were recorded as mere visualizations introduced by Freud himself. For more details on this important point, see Frank Cioffi's recent work, Freud and the Question of Pseudoscience (1998). I thank Frederick Crews for bringing this fact to my attention. 28. In later life Ernst had no memory of this game (in Freud 1992: 61), which isn't unusual. But to analysts this fact would no doubt signifY the normal postanalytic "amnesia" that Freud, for example, found with Little Hans (Freud 1909: 14849). 29. Freud not incidentally informs the reader that Ernst's mother literally disappeared just a few years later when she died (from influenza). As Freud states in a footnote, "Now that she was really 'gone' ('o-o-o'), the little boy showed no signs of grief" (1920a: 16). The mother drops out of the picture just as easily as the "o" in the transition from "o-o-o-o" (fort) to "o-o-o."The German word ort means, interestingly enough, "place"; the transition, then, is from "gone" to "place." What place? Beyond. 30. Freud 1933a: ro6. 3 r. It is worth noting that this essay predates, first, the instances of war neuroses that impelled Freud to reconsider the (possibly "daemonic") role of repetition in psychic life as well as, second, Freud's observation of repetition as evidenced in children's play. For the war did not officially begin until 1914 -hence physicians were not yet interested in the phenomenon of war neuroses-and Freud's vacation in

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Hamburg (where he observed Ernst) did not take place until September 1915. This paper on technique, nonetheless, returns as a supporting reference in chapter 3 of BPP-I say "supporting" because it is placed conveniently after his preliminary discussion of war trauma and child's play. Analytic technique is thereby put to work for the sake of metapsychology, that is, for the sake of proof. This is, however, a sleight of hand, since repetition of one's social relations from the past (i.e., the theory of transference) is not reducible to this other, instinctual, repetition. 32. In any case, such memories-assuming there are any-are obviously not repressed and, therefore, not of much interest to Freud. 33. Strachey tells us that Freud delivered this essay, one on telepathy, and another on neurotic mechanisms, to some colleagues "during a walking-tour in the Hartz mountains in September, 1921," although he did not complete the writing of "Remarks" until the following July (in Freud 1923b: 108). 34. Freud added the parenthetical clause in 1923, which makes his allusion to suggestion more obvious. The original clause of 1920 was far less direct about the role of suggestion and simply read, according to Strachey's note, "the wish which is not unconscious" (1920a: 32, n. 2). 35. This is a bit confusing, though, since Freud did not update this old work with new references and footnotes, as he did with his favorite works, such as The Interpretation of Dreams and Beyond the Pleasure Principle. More to the point, The Introductory Lectures do not take into consideration the new dualism and the deathdrive theory that he introduced in 1920. Perhaps, then, Freud (like his critics) was not very aware of the connection between his treatment of hypnosis, group psychology, and the death drive-but I doubt it. 36. Remember, psychoanalysis was based on the very failures that Freud originally attributed to the seduction theory, failures that were recast as "evidence" of infantile sexuality and fantasy. His later, properly psychoanalytic case studies fare no better, as he published only failures. Not surprisingly, Freud became increasingly pessimistic about the efficacy of psychoanalytic treatment, concluding at the end of his life that treatment was "interminable" (Freud 1937). For a brilliant discussion of these and similarly stunning facts, see Frank Cioffi's Freud and the Question of Pseudoscience (1998). 37. For example, Poul Bjerre writes:"At the assembly of German Neurologists in October, 1910, physicians belonging to sanatoria were obliged to officially give out a declaration that they had nothing to do with psychoanalysis, and [Emil] Raimann suggested that neurologists should agree among themselves upon the publication of every case in which it could possibly be suspected that psychoanalytical treatment had done the patient harm" (1920: 84).At some point Freud successfully petitioned Julius von Wagner-Jauregg to get Raimann, a pupil, to stop his public criticisms of psychoanalysis (see Ellenberger 1970: 470). 38. Here Freud may have been thinking about Fliess's botched operation on Emma's nose, although he may more generally have been thinking about the untold number of cases of surgical mutilation that were passed off as a treatment for hyste-

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ria and other mental illnesses, and for which psychanalysis was obviously a less dangerous treatment (see Bonomi 1997). 39. Eysenck 1985: 19. 40. For a noted discussion of the "Tally Argument;' see Adolf Griinbaum (1984: 140-48); I thank Frederick Crews for reminding me of this fact. A convincing critique of the tally argument is made by Frank Cioffi (1998: 252-63).

Afterword: How to Be a Freudian r. These words, among others, were used in early 1996 to describe the petitioners of the Library of Congress Freud exhibit, which was temporarily postponed from fall 1996 to October 1998.As one of the original petitioners, I can attest to the spin campaign waged against us, especially in North America and France. Although we demanded simply that a wide spectrum of informed opinion be represented at the exhibit, an exhibit, after all, being funded and presented at a public institution, we were portrayed in the media by analysts and their sponsors as "censors." This was a total fabrication, of course, one perpetrated by people who knew as much. Elisabeth Roudinesco, for example, was responsible for much of the motivated misrepresentation in France, where she gathered I So signatures for a counterpetition against us. In turn, Borch-Jacobsen was outrageously accused in the French media of being a "negationist" -a loaded word normally reserved for Holocaust deniers. For an overview of the fiasco, see Dufresne (1998b). The primary documents involved in this international affair, over three hundred pages worth and climbing, have been deposited by Peter Swales in the Library of Congress. The petitioners of the exhibit, a heterogeneous group of over forty scholars and analysts, included the following people: Swales, Borch-Jacobsen, Frederick Crews, Robert Holt, Daniel Burston, Morris Eagle, Phyllis Grosskurth, Frank Cioffi, Malcolm Macmillan, Frank Sulloway, John Kerr, Adolf Griinbaum, Oliver Sacks, and Freud's own granddaughter, Sophie Freud. 2. An excellent reader of revisionist work on psychoanalysis has been compiled by Crews, called Unauthorized Freud: Doubters Confront a Legend (1998).

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